ByPaul DeRienzo

An independent group of researchers in Arkansas are charging that
Governor Bill Clinton is covering up an airport used by the CIA and
major cocaine smugglers in a remote corner of the Ozark mountains.
According to Deborah Robinson of In These Times, the Inter mountain
Regional Airport in Mena,Arkansas continues to be the hub of operations
for people like assassinated cocaine kingpin Barry Seal as well as
government intelligence operations linked to arms and drug smuggling.

In the 1980's, the Mena airport became one of the world's largest
aircraft refurbishing centers, providing services to planes from many
countries.Researchers claim that the largest consumers of aircraft
refurbishing services are drug smugglers and intelligence agencies
involved in covert activities.In fact, residents of Mena, Arkansas, have
told reporters that former marine Lt. Colonel Oliver North was a
frequent visitor during the 1980's. Eugene Hasenfus, a pilot who was
shot down in a Contra supply plane over Nicaragua in 1986, was also seen
in town renting cargo vehicles.

A federal Grand Jury looking into
activities at the Mena airport refused to hand down any indictments
after drug running charges were made public.Deborah Robinson says that
Clinton had "ignored the situation" until he began his
presidential campaign." Clinton then said he would provide money
for a state run investigation of the Mena airport. But according to
Robinson, the promise of an investigation was never followed up by
Clinton's staff. In fact, a local Arkansas state prosecutor blasted
Clinton's promise of an investigation, comparing it to "spitting on
a forest fire."

Clinton's involvement in the drug and arms
running goes even further than a mere cover-up of the deplorable
activities that went on, and are still going on, at the airport in Mena.
A federal mail fraud case against an Arkansas pilot-trainer who
participated in illegal arms exports to Central Americarelied on a key
Clinton staffer as a chief witness. The case was dismissedfor lack of
evidence when the CIA refused to allow the discussion of top secret
information about the arms transfers.

Terry Reed, a former
employee of the CIA's Air America operation in Laos during the Indochina
war, claims to have been recruited as a pilot trainer into the Iran
operation by Oliver North. In an article written by David Gallis and
published last year by Covert Action Information Bulletin, Reed said that
in 1983 he had agreed to supply North's operatives with "certain
items."

In pursuit of the Reagan administration's Contra war
against the Sandinistas, the CIA had planted mines in Nicaragua's
harbors. In 1984, Congress passed the Boland Amendment, which cut off
US aid to the Contras. According to Reed, it was during this period
that North aided him to become involved in a covert operation called
"Project Donation". Reed was told he would be reimbursed for
supplying the Contras by insurance companies that were linked to North's
operation.,

Shortly afterwards, Reed reported the
"theft" of Piper turbo-prop aircraft and he filed a $33,000
claim on which he eventually collected almost $7,000.

In late
1985, Reed received a phone call from an Air America buddy,
William Cooper, a pilot working with Southern Air Transport, another CIA
front company. Cooper also was working with soon to be murdered drug
kingpin Barry Seal at the same time he was flying re-supply missions for
the Contras. In 1986, he was shot down and killed over Nicaragua along
with co-pilot Wallace Sawyer. The plane's cargo-kicker, Eugene
Hasenfus, parachuted into the arms of waiting Sandinista soldiers. Video
images of his capture spanned the world and forced an airing of a tiny
part of US covert operations.

Sandinistas who recovered the downed
cargo plane searched Cooper's pockets and found phone numbers linking
the re-supply operation with Felix Rodriguez, an associate of George
Bush, best known for murdering Che Guevara after his capture in Bolivia.
To this day, Rodriguez, who works for the CIA, wears Che's watch as a
trophy.

Reed says that Cooper told him that the stolen Piper would
soon be returned and that he should store it in a hanger at Mena until
the Hasenfus mess blew over. "There was a lot of Contra stuff going
on in Arkansas." said Reed, "it was the hub."

Meanwhile, Reed went into business in Mexico with the blessing of
Rodriguez, who was overseeing the Contra air re-supply operation in El
Salvador. Reed's company used Mexico to export arms to the Contras, in
violation of the Boland Amendment. Reed went down to Mexico and his
operation continued for a year after the Iran-Contra story broke.

According to Arkansas Committee researcher Mark Swaney, in the summer of
1987, even as the ContraGate hearings were going on in Congress, Terry
Reed began to suspect they were using his front company for something
other than smuggling weapons. One day, he was looking for a lathe in
one of his warehouses near the airport in Guadalajara and he opened up
one of the very large air freight shipping containers (they are about
28' long, about 7' high and about 8' wide), and he found it packed full
of cocaine.

Swaney reports that Reed realized he was in a very
precarious situation because he was the only person on paper who had
anything to do with the company set up to run guns to the Contras in
Nicaragua out of Mexico and there was nobody to say that he did not know
anything about what was going on. Reed decided he wasn't going to play
the part of a patsy.

Swaney says that Reed's contact man for the
CIA in Mexico was Felix Rodriguez, whom Reed confronted. Reed said that
he hadn't bargained for getting into narcotics smuggling and that he was
dropping out all together. Soon afterward, his legal problems began.

In a series of mysterious events, Reed was charged with mail fraud
for claiming insurance for an aircraft that was used by North's network
under Operation Donation. Reed, who was eventually acquitted of the
charges, was picked up by the FBI after the missing plane was discovered
in the Mena hanger where Reed had put the plane at Cooper's suggestion.
The discovery was made by Clinton's security chief Buddy Young. Young
testified that his discovery of the stolen plane was coincidental, an
assertion federal Judge Frank Thiel said was unsupported by the facts.

Reed was charged with mail fraud for collecting insurance on the
plane, but the CIA prevented prosecutors from releasing information they
called "top, top secret," about the Rodriguez-North, Southern
Air Transport connection. In November 1990, the prosecution admitted
they couldn't prosecute Reed without the secret documents and Judge Thiel
ordered Reed acquitted on all of the charges.

Allegations of
Governor Bill Clinton's extra-marital sexual exploits originated with a
1990 lawsuit by Larry Nichols, a former Arkansas state employee.
Nichols was fired by Clinton in 1988 after reporters discovered Nichols
had been lobbying on behalf of the Contras from his office as head of
the Arkansas Development Finance Authority.

The suit claimed that
Clinton had lied when he said Nichols was fired because he was phoning
the Contras directly from his state office. Nichols claimed he only
called Washington to lobby on behalf of the Contras. In the
suit, Nichols also revealed the affair between Clinton and office
secretary Gennifer Flowers.

The suit was dropped by Nichols on
January 25, 1992, after Gennifer Flowers went public with her story of
the affair. Nichols told reporters that he decided to drop the suit
after meeting with Clinton security chief Buddy Young- the same man who
found Terry Reed's missing Piper aircraft at the Mena airport.

According to Arkansas Committee researcher Mark Swaney, Nichols said
that Young had told him he was a "dead man." prompting Nichols
to drop the suit. In public, Nichols says he dropped the suit because
"the media have made a circus out of this thing and it's gone way
too far."

In court documents recently released by Manhattan
District Attorney Robert Morgenthau, it has been revealed that Jackson
Stephens, a billionaire banker in Little Rock, Arkansas, and one of
presidential candidate Bill Clinton's main supporters, may have played a
key role in setting up the illegal purchase by the Bank of Credit and
Commerce International (BCCI) of two American banks.

Both First
American National Bank, the largest bank in Washington DC, and Georgia
National Bank, were purchased by BCCI front man and Stephens
business associate Gaith Pharon. Stephens' family bank, the Worthern
National Bank,recently extended a two million dollar loan to the Clinton
campaign.

Stephens, who is an avid golfer and chairman of the
prestigious Masters Tournament Committee, is named in the court records
as having brought Pharon together with Stephens' close friend Bert Lance.
Lance was a former cabinet official under President Jimmy Carter who was
forced to resign due to a banking scandal.

According to newspaper
reports, BCCI founder Agha Hasan Abedi was introduced to Lance by
Stephens. Stephens, Lance, and First American Bank director and longtime
Democratic party power broker Clark Clifford all maintain that they did
not know the group of Pakinstani and Saudi investors headed by
Pharon, which they were dealing with, were actually fronting for BCCI.
Clinton's staff has refused to comment.

Bill Clinton's
environmental record has been as dismal as his record in the Iran-Contra
scandal. He has supported the incineration of extremely toxic chemicals
at a site in the city of Jacksonville, 20 miles from Little Rock, that
is reputed to be the most polluted spot in the United States.
Jacksonville was the site of Hercules Inc., a company that produced the
two components of Agent Orange, 2,4 D, which is still used in
agriculture and 2,4,5,T, which was banned by the federal government in
1983 as a carcinogen. Agent Orange was used to defoliate Vietnamese
forests during the Indochina war and its production yields the by-
product dioxin, the most toxic chemical known on earth.

Hercules
sold the operation in 1976 to Vertac Inc., which closed the plant in
1987, leaving behind 20,000 barrels of the chemicals. Gov. Bill Clinton
supports a plan to incinerate the waste, a plan that is being vigorously
opposed by the residents of Jacksonville.

In These Times reporter
Deborah Robinson says that Clinton has allowed Arkansas to become a
dumping ground. "Arkansas" she says, "is still kind of a
backwoods state and there's a lot of room for someone to set up whatever
they want to set up and Arkansas has been exploited by people who have
things they want to do that they might no get away with somewhere
else." Robinson adds, "there are a lot of questions about
what Somebody like Clinton would do for a country when he couldn't do
anything for his own state."